4.9. Adding Pictures to Your Posts

Radio offers several different ways to add pictures to your posts
ranging from shortcuts and global shortcuts to pasting from Internet
Explorer and image uploading, using Radio's
upstreaming model.

4.9.1. Pasting from Internet Explorer

If you use Internet Explorer for Windows, the easiest way to add
pictures to your blog is to copy them from
another source
on the Web. Let's say, for example, that you have an
existing web site where your pictures are stored. The Copy command in
Internet Explorer lets you copy images from other URLs and paste them
into Radio.

To paste an image from Internet Explorer, find a picture on your web
site and view in your web browser. Right-click the mouse button with
the mouse pointer over the picture you want to copy. Choose the Copy
command from the pop-up menu. Go to a story or post in
Radio's WYSIWYG editor, set the cursor where you
want the image, and press Ctrl-V, or choose Paste from the right
click pop-up menu. The picture is then pasted into your editor. Make
it available to your readers by publishing the post or story.

4.9.2. Adding Pictures by Uploading Files

The problem with
adding
pictures using the WYSIWYG editor, is that the picture file must
already be somewhere on the Internet, accessible as a URL. If you
have local picture files on your computer, you can use
Radio's upstreamingfeature to
upload your pictures to the server where your blog is located.

Upstreaming occurs
every 10 seconds
when Radio is running. This time interval can be set using Prefs if
you need to change it. Upstreaming can also be turned off by
right-clicking the Radio icon located in the Windows System Tray.

Upstreaming works when your blog is located at radio.weblogs.com/usernum/, as well as when
you use FTP to publish your blog to your own site.

To upstream a picture or pictures to your blog, open the wwwfolder contained in the folder where
Radio is installed. On Windows, this is usually C:\program
files\Radio UserLand\. Find a picture or pictures on your
filesystem and drag them into the myPictures
folder that was created for you when Radio was installed.

Provided that you
have
an Internet connection, Radio will automatically upstream any
pictures you moved into the directory and save them into your
myPictures folder on your server.

Once the picture has been upstreamed to your blog, you can insert it
into a blog posting or link to it, using the Folder command.
Selecting the Folder command from the Radio command bar displays all
the files and directories located on your server in the www directory, as in Figure 4-29.

Figure 4-29. The Folder view

Click on the link to the myPictures folder. This displays all the
files in that folder. If you click on the globe icon next to the
picture to which you want to link, the picture will be displayed.

If you are using Internet Explorer for Windows, you can insert the
picture into your blog by right-clicking it, selecting Copy, and
going to your blog and pasting it into a post or story. This is the
same process described in the preceding section.

To get an uploaded picture into a blog post or story if you
aren't using Internet Explorer for Windows, you need
to copy the URL of the picture, not the picture itself. Once the URL
is copied, go to the blog story or post where you want the picture.

If you want to create a link to the picture, you need to enter the
HTML code for a hyperlink. This is entered in this format:

<A HREF="PASTE_PICTURE_URL_HERE">Link Anchor</A>

If you want to insert the picture itself into the blog post or story,
enter the HTML for an image. This is entered in this format:

<IMG SRC="PASTE_PICTURE_URL_HERE">

Of course, any standard HTML code for formatting pictures can also be
specified (borders, alignment, etc.).

4.9.3. Notes on Upstreaming Files

This approach of dragging a picture file into a folder within the
www folder can be used to upload
any type of file to your blog (except for .avi
files). Radio uploads all files, not just picture files. You can also
create any folders you need beneath the www
directory to organize your uploaded files, and those folders with
their contents will be uploaded to the server. You can use the same
linking method discussed above to create links to any uploaded files.

4.9.4. Limitations on Upstreaming Files

Radio operates differently when upstreaming files to a web site via
FTP than it does when upstreaming files to radio.weblogs.com/usernum/. When your files
go to a blog located at radio.weblogs.com, they always remain in the
myPictures directory. When you use FTP, these
files are moved up to the server and deleted from the
myPictures directory. An additional limitation
is that Radio's linking mechanism via the Folder
command does not show the correct URL for FTP'd
files. You will have to correct the URLs that Radio creates.

4.9.5. Using the MyPictures Tool

In the preceding sections, we discussed manually uploading
individual image files. This is fine when you have only a few images,
but what about when you have many images? The MyPictures tool
monitors a specific folder on your computer and automatically uploads
any images placed to a folder where your blog resides.

The MyPictures tool is not enabled by default. To turn it on, click
on the Tools link in the Radio command bar. Tools are extensions to
Radio that give it new features. This displays all installed tools.
Click on the MyPictures link. Clicking the MyPictures link gives you
the configuration options for MyPictures, as shown in Figure 4-30.

Figure 4-30. MyPictures Preferences

You probably don't want to use your main image
directory such as "My Pictures" (in
Windows). You should create a directory below this so that images you
don't want put online can still be in this folder.
The default folder name that Radio uses is Radio Upstream and, if you
use this, all you have to do to start using MyPictures is create this
folder, select the MyPictures checkbox, and click the Submit button.
If you need to change the folder on your blog where images go when
they are uploaded, just modify the option for
x:\www\images. For
example, if you were uploading photos, you might want them stored in
a photos directory on your blog. In this case, set the folder to
C:\UserLand\Radio Clean\Radio
UserLand\www\photos\ to access them at http://yourblog/photos/ or set it to
C:\UserLand\Radio Clean\Radio
UserLand\www\images\photos\ to access them at http://yourblog/images/photos.

If the MyPictures tool isn't installed with your
copy of Radio, it can be downloaded and installed from: